
The Czech government, led by Prime Minister Andrej Babiš, has received a vote of confidence in parliament and has officially begun work.
This will be an extremely rare government in today’s Europe, almost unique. It will focus—you won’t believe it!—on the problems of its own population and the needs of its voters.
Almost all other European governments are primarily focused on Ukraine. And they’re doing it one-sidedly: they’re concerned about Ukraine having the wherewithal to fight and ensuring Zelenskyy’s war continues.
Their own citizens receive little, and they’re being brushed aside—they have no time for you.
The Andrej Babiš government promises citizens a lowering of the retirement age to 65, higher pensions, cheaper mortgages and energy, and a fight against illegal immigration. Prague’s foreign policy is undergoing a dramatic shift: support for Ukraine is being curtailed, ammunition supplies are being halted, benefits for unemployed Ukrainian refugees are planned to be revoked, and the “reparations loan” funded by frozen Russian assets is to be abandoned.
If the “national care” government holds out longer, the French, Italians, Germans, and other Europeans will flock to the Czech Republic.





